What will upcoming inflation figures mean for interest rates in the UK?
Inflation is expected to have fallen back to its lowest level for nearly a year in Wednesdayโs official figures for January, in a boost to interest rate cut hopes.
Most economists are forecasting Office for National Statistics (ONS) data to show Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation fell back sharply to 3% in January from 3.4% in December, according to Pantheon Macroeconomics.
This would be the lowest level since March 2025.
It is set to come on the back of lower airfares, food and energy price inflation in January.
The figures are likely to reinforce expectations of another interest rate cut, possibly as soon as next month.
Disappointing growth figures for the final quarter of last year have added to forecasts for a rate cut in March, to 3.5% from 3.75% currently.
The ONS said gross domestic product (GDP) eked of meagre growth of 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2025, leaving the out-turn for the year as a whole at a worse-than-expected 1.3% expansion.
But Bank of England chief economist Huw Pill said at a Santander event on Friday that he thought rates were already โa little bit too lowโ, suggesting he would not be among those voting for a reduction next month.
Mr Pill voted as part of the 5-4 majority on the Bankโs Monetary Policy Committee to keep interest rates on hold at 3.75% earlier this month.
The Bank is forecasting that inflation will fall to its 2% target by the middle of the year, as measures announced in the Chancellorโs autumn budget will help to slow inflation, particularly a package of support to bring down household energy bills from April.
For the latest data, Pantheon is expecting a steep drop โas energy, airfares, education and food price inflation all slowโ.
Pantheon experts said airfares are set to have dropped by nearly a quarter last month, having soared in December as increased demand for travel over the festive period fuelled price hikes.
Though it believes inflation will be 3% โ a touch higher than the Bank of Englandโs 2.9% prediction.
Investec Economics economist Ellie Henderson said food price growth is also likely to have dropped to 4.2%, below Novemberโs level, but warned there was a risk that food inflation was still a โkey concernโ.
She added that inflation may also be pushed lower by VAT on private school fees falling out of the annual comparison, as well as โsome heavier discounting than usual by retailersโ.
She said: โAn additional small source of downward pressure on the annual rate looks to have come from utility prices.
โThere was a near-5% rise in electricity prices on the month as per the energy price cap, but this was countered by a fall in gas prices.
โIn total, the energy price cap increased by just 0.2% in January, smaller than the 1.2% increase in January 2025.โ
The inflation figures come in a busy week for official UK economic statistics, with data for unemployment and wages on Tuesday and government borrowing and retail figures on Friday.
